Discussions of the 1960–1970S on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching for a Balance Between Heavy and Light Industries and Agriculture

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Discussions of the 1960–1970S on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching for a Balance Between Heavy and Light Industries and Agriculture Journal of Siberian Federal University. Humanities & Social Sciences 11 (2018 11) 1896-1910 ~ ~ ~ УДК 332.05(571.1/.5) Discussions of the 1960–1970s on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching for a Balance between Heavy and Light Industries and Agriculture Rinat Rezvanov* Siberian Federal University 79 Svobodny, Krasnoyarsk, 660041, Russia Received 27.08.2018, received in revised form 26.10.2018, accepted 09.11.2018 The article concerns the main conceptual approaches in 1960–1970s towards the issue of spatial and economic (spatial and household) development of Siberia. The discourse analysis is focused on discrepancies in economic models among the representatives of leading Soviet research centers involved in “Siberian issue” investigation per se. They are especially the Council for the Study of Production Forces at the State Planning Committee of the USSR (CSPR, Moscow) and the Institute of Economics and Industrial Management at SB AS (IEIM, Novosibirsk). These also may include the Institute of Siberian and Far East Geography at SB AS (ISFEG, Irkutsk), though the amount of its conceptual scientific and research findings was a way below the ones of CSPR and IEIM. The processes were mainly performed by the local authorities as well: a relevant example here is a study of the developing Achinsk-Nazarovo and Abakan-Minusinsk industrial hubs conducted by IEIM under the order of the Council of National Economy of Krasnoyarsk – an owner of the research and final decision-making center. Keywords: Siberia, Soviet planning, Soviet industrialization in Siberia, spatial and economic planning, urban development, migration of population, women’s issue, Krasnoyarsk Krai, Novosibirsk, Irkutsk Oblast’, Altai Krai, Siberian cities, migration processes, history of Russia, history of USSR. Research area: history. Citation: Rezvanov, R. (2018). Discussion of the 1960–1970s on the spatial and economic deve­ lopment of Siberia: Searching for a balance between heavy and light industries and agriculture. J. Sib. Fed. Univ. Humanit. soc. sci., 11(11), 1896­1910. DOI: 10.17516/1997­1370­0346. © Siberian Federal University. All rights reserved * Corresponding author E­mail address: [email protected] This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution­NonCommercial 4.0 International License (CC BY­NC 4.0). – 1896 – Rinat Rezvanov. Discussions of the 1960–1970s on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching… Introduction The article has regard to methodological basis of the history of intellectual ideas with its detailed attention to the textual sources and corresponding interpretational (hermeneutic) structures, and to the context in the chronology of which the discourse of scientific intertextuality has been built (Repina, 2009: 7–80). It is increasingly important to identify polemical field in the original works of the Soviet analytic centers (CSPR, IEIM, ISFEG). Taking into consideration the creed of intellectual history stated by Alan Megill, an American historian: “the ideas have consequences, and this is the reason why they deserve critical and historical investigation” (Megill, 2005: 20), – for the modern Russian economy this factor is becoming remarkably significant, since the concepts considered in this research (conventionally: both of the State Planning and IEIM) have been implemented. Industrial development of the East unavoidably encountered the problem of high capital intensity on running the projects. Every new project devolved into incomparably huge material and economic costs by the side of the Western districts. Siberian specific character impacted, as a rule, 1.5 appreciation of construction and installation works, and the building period was two or three times longer. All these were claimed by the Soviet researchers back to the beginning of the 1970s (Kotliar, 1989: 16). In Siberia per se, regarding its territorial heterogeneity, trans­regional differentiation could show far bigger gap in the figures. For example, in Norilsk, in the center of the Northernmost development of the regional production complex in the Soviet Union, the cost of social services appeared to be 3.5 times higher, than in Krasnoyarsk (Vorobiyov, 1977: 128). Thus, the state set its hopes on science for effective measures that would allow cutting costs. The economists were meant to plan and rationalize properly the economics of location; otherwise, the price for a mistake in implementation of the major complex projects (e.g., localization of regional production complexes) could have been prohibitively high. Dealing with the problem of high costs, the Soviet economists paid their attention to the payroll budget. To the East of this country permanent payment costs were added with the necessity of wage indexation and introduction of complementary measures on material rewards. The indexation, “Northern allowances” in particular, was meant to act to attract and retain staff in the districts with unfavorable natural climatic conditions and undeveloped social, cultural and living infrastructure. An important milestone in the development of the system of public encouragement was the adoption – 1897 – Rinat Rezvanov. Discussions of the 1960–1970s on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching… of joint Decision of the CPSU Central Committee and the USSR Cabinet dated on February 4, 1960 “On Regulating the Benefits for People, Working in the Territories of Extreme North and Equated Areas”. It introduced extra­10% payment to the monthly wage (excluding the regional coefficient and employment year reward) depending on the territory and employment history. The reality was that locally the increased salary rate was not often followed. According to the East Siberian Planning Committee, in the end of 1968 real earnings of the material sector employees in the Eastern Siberia was 94% and the ones of non­production sphere – 81% relatively to the Republic’s average indicator (i.e. in the RSFSR). And these were the results on the background of higher costs, which, according to the Planning Committee, were bore by the residents of Irkutsk Oblast’ in comparison with the central districts: “on heating – by 90%, on clothes – by 18%, while the market prices on Siberia are 30% higher than in the European part of the country” (Araslanova, 2015: 20). Nevertheless, the focus on material encouraging was among priorities. As early as in the 1980 the Far East was placed 1st on the level of average monthly earnings, alongside with the Eastern and Western Siberia – 2nd and 3rd correspondingly (Breev, 1977: 47). From the perspective of the scientists of the Council for the Study of Production Forces at the State Planning Committee of the USSR, it was the reduction of relative costs on salaries in the Eastern part of the country, in the Extreme Northern areas (and equated in particular), that could help to overcome the impact of negative production appreciation. The State Planning of the USSR relied on three main parameters of the economic development in that territory: 1. Enhancement of sectoral economy through the spatial and production plans streamlining; 2. Implementation of “industrial triad” made up of comprehensive mechanization, automatization and electrification of production. It meant to use machines and mechanisms featured with “Siberian”, “Northern” configuration (i.e. given low temperatures, permafrost, highly broken landscape and other unfavorable factors); 3. Labor force saving, both from technical and institutional perspectives (Kistanova, 1978: 49). The management of costs cutting was dominated by the territorial­sectoral planning. Here too, the Soviet planning committees preferred the development of – 1898 – Rinat Rezvanov. Discussions of the 1960–1970s on the Spatial and Economic Development of Siberia: Searching… fuel and power and energy intensive industries, machine building enterprises and equipment production, as well as extracting and forest industries. Having adopted the main lines, the Soviet economic planning was no longer considered underdevelopment of other, non­prior regional productions, to be a mistaken omission. According to the Central Institutions, they could have even become competitors for the systemic companies. It was attributable to the following: “one cannot classify slow in comparison with the Union’s average level development of such labour­intensive sectors as precision engineering, chemical proceeding industry, light industry, etc. under economic disadvantages of labour­deficit territories. Enhancing growth of these productions given the labour deficit may well downward the pressure of other, more effective industries...” (Kistanova, 1978: 62). “Comparatively slight growth of population and labour force ultimately insists on emphasizing the development of energy­intensive industries. In the Eastern Siberia it is relevant to produce aluminum, copper, nickel, ferrous­based alloys, chemical fibers, paper, etc. (Vorobiyov, 1977: 128). In two decades after the “Eastern” decisions had been adopted at the 20th Communist Party Congress, the Soviet economists successively implemented the set of strategic productions. There were no serious structural shifts in the spatial and economic planning, and the general industrial trend was determined by the same old factors. Hence was the focus on energy­intensive and resource­based industries – the first which were to be staffed. The words matched the deeds. Table 1 below clearly demonstrates how high the proportion of people employed in Siberian heavy industries
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